Interesting read . Truth hurts all the "Very Serious People" who seem to want to impoverish all seniors -- except for themselves (they are rich already).
Most of our "leaders", and ALL Republicans are SOB's who have totally lost touch with the USA. They act as if THEY hate America. SHAME on them all.
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http://host.madison.com/ct/news/opinion/column/dave_zweifel/plain-talk-don-t-buy-lies-about-social-security/article_7a127b1a-6666-11e2-ba59-0019bb2963f4.html
Let’s be brutally frank today: The claim by some of those Wall Street
money changers and politicians like Wisconsin’s own Paul Ryan and many
of his Republican colleagues that Social Security is contributing to the
national debt and therefore needs to be “fixed” is nothing more than an
outright lie.
Because the late President Franklin D. Roosevelt
wanted to make sure that the Social Security Trust Fund was protected
from the ever-changing political winds, it was set up as a separate
self-financed system that gets its revenues from three sources — roughly
80 percent from the payroll tax of 6.2 percent for both the employee
and employer (the 6.2 was reduced to 4.2 for employees to help provide
relief during the recession and went back to 6.2 percent on Jan. 1),
another 15 percent from interest earned by the trust fund, and the other
5 percent from taxes that Social Security recipients wind up paying at
income tax time. In Social Security’s 75-year history, it has collected
$15.5 trillion and currently has $2.6 trillion in the bank, enough money
to pay full benefits until about 2037.
It cannot borrow, but the
government itself can borrow from it and always does. The Social
Security Trust Fund currently holds roughly 18 percent of the federal
government’s debt, twice as much as China, the country Republicans like
to claim is holding our debt. Former Michigan Sen. Donald Riegle, who
believes the government ought to repay Social Security, has pointed out
that President George W. Bush borrowed heavily from the trust fund to
mask the budget costs of his two wars and the tax reductions he
engineered in his first term.
And now it’s the congressional
Republicans and Wall Street financiers who are spreading the lie that we
can’t tackle the national debt problem without changing Social
Security.
In a recent op-ed, Riegle named Wall Street insider Pete
Peterson as a leading advocate of this lie. He has dedicated a billion
dollars of his fortune to destroy the system as we know it.
“Peterson
is joined in his efforts by other wealthy special interests that have
much to gain if Social Security is cut or eliminated,” the retired
senator said. “The same Wall Street firms that needed the taxpayers to
bail them out — and individuals like Peterson who took advantage of a
tax loophole that enabled him to pay taxes on his Wall Street profits at
the same rate as a janitor cleaning his office — are conducting a
massive lobbying campaign to reduce Social Security protections” by
claiming it’s a way to lower the deficit.
In fact, Riegle points
out, Wall Street ought to be reimbursing the system for the money it
lost when workers lost their jobs and interest rates plummeted thanks to
the reckless behavior of Wall Street banks and other financiers.
“Social
Security did not create the economic problem or the budget deficit,” he
adds. “Wall Street and other government spending did. But the opponents
of Social Security don’t want to pay back all the money that was
borrowed from Social Security. Instead they want to cut Social Security
benefits.”
That, of course, would be a hard hit for millions of
older Americans, many of whom rely on Social Security to keep them out
of poverty. And all for the benefit of those who least need it, but are
willing to lie to get it.
Ten Economic Questions for 2025
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